E 202 

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.1 
79 
Copy 1 



£>ons of ttje i&etjolutton 



IN THE 



£>tate of 3Jotoa. 



MDCCCXCV. 



Gift 

Mrs. Julian Jam©« 

1912 



^W««lij 




tO)e Constitution 



OF THE 



Society of £>ons of ti)e iaetoolutton 



3Bg*lLaws an& IRegistcc 



Ct)e 3Jotoa £>octetj>- 



DAVENPORT: 

EDWARD BORCHERDT, PRINTER. 

MDCCCXCV. 



ET- 
■jt 

•- 






§>on0 of tlje ^eiolution 



£>tate of 3lotoa. 



flnstitutcfc Hpril 19, 1800, 

BY 

Right Reverend WILLIAM STEVENS PERRY, D.D., LL.D. (Oxon.), 
Of the New York Society. 



©fficere. 

President, 
Rt. Rev. WILLIAM STEVENS PERRY, D.D., {Oxon.), LL.D., D.C.L., 

Bishop of Iowa. 

Vice-President, 
SAMUEL FRANCIS SMITH, Davenport. 

Secretary, 
Ven. SAMUEL ROOSEVELT JOHNSON HOYT, D.D., Davenport. 

Treasurer, 
ESEK STEERE BALLORD, Davenport. 

Chaplain, 
Rev. SAMUEL NEWELL W r ATSON, D.D., Iowa City. 

Registrar, 
HENRY HERVEY HILLS, Davenport. 

Historian. 
Rev. WILLIAM SALTER, D.D., Burlington. 



Officers 



OF THE 



General %otizty ^ons of t&e iRetoolution* 

©rganijet), 
Washington, D. C, April 19, 1890. 

[New York Society Instituted February 22, 1876. 
Reorganized December 4, 1883.] 



General President, 
Hon. JOHN LEE CARROLL, Ellicott City, Md., 

Of the Maryland Society. 

General Vice-President. 
GARRETT DORSET WALL VROOM, Trenton, 

Of the New Jersey Society. 

Second General Vice-President, 
JOHN SCREVEN, Savannah, 

Of the Georgia Society. 

General Secretary. 
JAMES MORTIMER MONTGOMERY, No. 97 Cedar Street, New York, 

Of the New York Society. 

Assistant General Secretary, 
WILLIAM HALL HARRIS, No. 216 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, 

Of the Maryland Society. 

General Treasurer, 
RICHARD McCALL CADWALADER, 710 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, 

Of the Pennsylvania Society. 

General Assistant Treasurer, 
STEPHEN SALISBURY, Worcester, 

Of the Massachusetts Society. 

General Chaplain, 
Rev. MORGAN DIX, D. D., S. T. D., New York City, 

Of the New York Society. 

General Registrar, 
JOHN WOOLF JORDAN, 1300 Locust Street, Philadelphia, 

Of the Pennsylvania Society. 

General Historian, 
THEODORUS BAILEY MYERS MASON, U. S. N., Washington, 

Of the District of Columbia Society. 



5 



JBearo of Afcanaflers. 

Right Rev. WILLIAM STEVENS PERRY, D.D., LL.D., D.C.L. 
SAMUEL FRANCIS SMITH. 

Ven. SAMUEL ROOSEVELT JOHNSON HOYT, D.D. 
ESEK STEERE BALLORD. 
Rev. SAMUEL NEWELL WATSON, D.D. 
HENRY HERVEY HILLS. 
Rev. WILLIAM SALTER, D.D. 
EDWARD SEYMOUR HAMMATT. 
Hon. GEORGE MARTIN CURTIS. 
JOHN BELL DOUGHERTY. 
THEODORE WELLS BARHYDT. 
CHARLES SEYMOUR ROBISON. 



Gomtnittee on Somteetotte. 

SAMUEL FRANCIS SMITH. 
ESEK STEERE BALLORD. 
CHARLES WHITAKER. 



Delegates to tbe ©eneral Society. 
Right Rev. Dr. WILLIAM STEVENS PERRY. 
Hon. GEORGE MARTIN CURTIS. 
WILLIAM CLEMENT PUTNAM. 
WILLIAM PERRY BRADY. 
ARTEMUS LAMB. 

alternates. 
CLIFFORD DUDLEY HAM. 

EDWARD SEYMOUR HAMMATT. 

Rev. Dr. SAMUEL NEWELL WATSON. 

JAMES BLAINE MASON. 

JAMES MADISON DE ARMOND. 



Officers of tije £>octetp 



From Its Organization, April ig, 1890. 



elected. President, retired. 

1890 Rt. Rev. WILLIAM STEVENS PERRY, D.D., LL.D., D.C.L. 

Vice-Presidents, 

1890 Hon. JAMES GRANT, LL.D. Died, 1891 

1891 SAMUEL FRANCIS SMITH. 

Secretaries, 

1890 EDWARD SEYMOUR HAMMATT, 1895 

1895 Ven. SAMUEL ROOSEVELT JOHNSON HOYT, D.D. 

Treasurer. 
1890 ESEK STEERE BALLORD. 

Registrars and Historians, 

1890 JOHN HUBBARD STURGIS. 1892 

1892 Ven. SAMUEL ROOSEVELT JOHNSON HOYT, D.D. 1893 

1893 WILLIAM CLEMENT PUTNAM. 1894 

Registrar, 

1894 HENRY HERVEY HILLS. 

Historian, 
1894 Rev. WILLIAM SALTER, D.D. 

Chaplains, 

1890 Rev. WILLIAM SALTER, D.D. 1891 

1891 Rt. Rev. CHARLES REUBEN HALE, D.D., LL.D. 1893 

Bishop of Cairo. 

1893 Ven. SAMUEL ROOSEVELT JOHNSON HOYT, D.D. 1894 

1894 Rev. SAMUEL NEWELL WATSON, D.D. 



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FAC 8IMILE OF THE NATIONAL ODE 

Sons of tbe "Revolution 



WRITTEN BY 

fi^^^SS.. SAMUEL FRANCIS SMITH 

FOR THE IOWA SOCIETY 

ADOPTED APRIL 19, 1094 

AT A BANQUET TENDERED THE SOCIETY. 
— by- 
Mr. Samueij Francis Smith 

SON OF THE AUTHOR 



&*A 



COttStttUttOtt 



OF THE 



General ^ocietp of tjje %om of tfje Eetjolutton. 



IT BEING evident, from a steady decline of a proper cele- 
bration of the National holidays of the United States of 
America, that popular concern in the events and men 
of the war of the Revolution is gradually declining, and that 
such lack of interest is attributable, not so much to the lapse 
of time and the rapidly increasing flood of immigration from 
foreign countries, as to the neglect on the part of descend- 
ants of Revolutionary heroes to perform their duty in keep- 
ing before the public mind the memory of the services of 
their ancestors and of the times in which they lived; there- 
fore, the Society of the Sons of the Revolution has been 
instituted to perpetuate the memory of the men who, in the 
military, naval, and civil service of the Colonies and of the 
Continental Congress, by their acts or counsel, achieved the 
independence of the country, and to further the proper cele- 
bration of the anniversaries of the birthday of Washington, 
and of prominent events connected with the war of the Revo- 
lution; to collect and secure for preservation the rolls, rec- 
ords, and other documents relating to that period; to inspire 
the members of the Society with the patriotic spirit of their 
forefathers; and to promote the feeling of friendship among 
them. 



8 



The General Society shall be divided into State Societies, 
which shall meet annually on the day appointed therefor in 
their respective By-Laws, and oftener if found expedient; 
and at such annual meeting the reasons for the institution of 
the Society shall be considered, and the best measures for 
carrying them into effect adopted. 

The State Societies at every annual meeting shall choose 
a President, a Vice-President, a Secretary, a Registrar, a 
Treasurer, a Chaplain, and such other officers as may by 
them respectively be deemed necessary, and a Board of 
Managers, to consist of such officers, and other members, as 
may be provided by their respective Constitutions and By- 
Laws, all of whom shall retain their respective positions until 
their successors are duly chosen. 

Each State Society shall cause to be transmitted annually 
or oftener to the other State Societies a circular letter calling 
attention to whatever may be thought worthy of observation 
respecting the welfare of the Society or of the general union 
of the States, and giving information of the officers chosen 
for the year; and copies of these letters shall also be trans- 
mitted to the General Secretary to be preserved among the 
records of the General Society. 

The State Societies shall regulate all matters respecting 
their own affairs, consistent with the general good of the 
Society; judge of the qualification of their members or of 
those proposed for membership, subject, however, to the pro- 
visions of this Constitution; and expel any member who, by 
conduct unbecoming a gentleman or a man of honor, or by 
any opposition to the interests of the community in general 
or of the Society in particular, may render himself unworthy 
to continue in membership. 

In order to form funds that may be respectable, each 



9 



member shall contribute upon his admission to the Society 
and annually thereafter, such sums as the By-Laws of the 
respective State Societies may require; but any of such State 
Societies may provide for the endowment of memberships by 
the payment of proper sums in capitalization, which sums 
shall be properly invested as a permanent fund, the income 
only of which shall be expended. 

The regular meeting of the General Society shall be held 
every three years, and special meetings may be held upon 
the order of the General President or upon the request of two 
of the State Societies, and such meetings shall consist of the 
General Officers and a representation not exceeding five dep- 
uties from each State Society, and the necessary expenses of 
such meeting shall be borne by the State Societies. 

At the regular meeting a General President, Vice-Presi- 
dent, Secretary, Assistant Secretary, Treasurer, Assistant 
Treasurer, and Chaplain shall be chosen by a majority of the 
votes present, to serve until the next regular general meet- 
ing, or until their successors are duly chosen. 

At each general meeting the circular letters which have 
been transmitted by the several State Societies shall be con- 
sidered, and all measures taken which shall conduce to the 
general welfare of the Society. 

The General Society shall have power at any meeting to 
admit State Societies thereto, and to entertain and determine 
all questions affecting the qualifications for membership in or 
the welfare of any State Society as may by proper memorial 
be presented by such State Society for consideration. 

Any male person above the age of twenty-one years, of 
good character, and a descendant of one who, as a military, 
naval, or marine officer, soldier, sailor, or marine, in actual 



IO 



service, under the authority of any of the thirteen Colonies or 
States or of the Continental Congress, and remaining always 
loyal to such authority; or a descendant of one who signed 
the Declaration of Independence, or of one who, as a member 
of the Continental Congress or of the Congress of any of the 
Colonies or States, or as an official appointed by or under 
the authority of any such legislative bodies, actually assisted 
in the establishment of American Independence by services 
rendered during the war of the Revolution, becoming thereby 
liable to conviction of treason against the government of 
Great Britain, but remaining always loyal to the authority of 
the Colonies or States, shall be eligible to membership in the 
Society. 

The Secretary of each State Society shall transmit to the 
General Secretary a list of the members thereof, together 
with the names and official designations of those from whom 
such members derive claim to membership; and thereafter, 
upon the admission of members in each State Society, the 
Secretary thereof shall transmit to the General Secretary 
information respecting such members similar to that herein 
required. 

The Society shall have an insignia, which shall be a badge 
suspended from a ribbon by a ring of gold; the badge to be 
elliptical in form, with escalloped edges, one and one-quarter 
inches in length and one and one-eighth inches in width; the 
whole surmounted by a gold eagle with wings displayed, 
inverted; on the obverse side a medallion of gold in the 
centre, elliptical in form, bearing on its face the figure of a 
soldier in Continental uniform, with musket slung; beneath, 
the figures 1775; the medallion surrounded by thirteen raised 
gold stars of five points each upon a border of dark blue 
enamel. On the reverse side, in the centre, a medallion cor- 
responding in form to that on the obverse, and also in gold, 



II 



bearing on its face the Houdon portrait of Washington in 
bas-relief, encircled by the legend, "Sons of the Revolu- 
tion;" beneath, the figures 1883; and upon the reverse of the 
eagle the number of the badge to be engraved; the medal- 
lion to be surrounded by a plain gold border, conforming in 
dimensions to the obverse; the ribbon shall be dark blue, 
ribbed and watered, edged with buff, one and one-half inches 
wide, and one and one-half inches in displayed length. 





"OBVERSE." 



• REVERSE. 



The insignia of the Society shall be worn by the members 
on all occasions when they assemble as such for any stated 
purpose or celebration, and may be worn on any occasion 
of ceremony ; it shall be carried conspicuously on the left 
breast, but members who are or have been officers of the 
Society may wear the insignia suspended from the ribbon 
around the neck. 



12 



The custodian of the insignia shall be the General Secre- 
tary, who shall issue them to members of the Society under 
such proper rules as may be formulated by the General Soci- 
ety, and he shall keep a register of such issues wherein each 
insignia issued may be identified by the number thereof. 




The seal of the Society shall be one and seven-eighths 
inches in diameter, and shall consist of the figure of a Min- 
ute-man in Continental uniform, standing on a ladder leading 
to a belfry; in his left hand he holds a musket and an olive- 
branch, whilst his right grasps a bell-rope; above, the 
cracked Liberty Bell; issuing therefrom a ribbon bearing the 
motto of the Society, Exegi monumentum are perennius ; 
across the top of the ladder on a ribbon, the figures 1776; 
and on the left of the Minute-man, and also on a ribbon, the 
figures 1883, the year of the formation of the Society; the 
whole encircled by a band three-eighths of one inch wide; 
thereon at the top thirteen stars of five points each; at the 
bottom the name of the General Society, or of the State 
Society to which the seal belongs. 



13 



On occasions other than the meetings for any stated pur- 
pose or celebration, members may wear a rosette of the pre- 
scribed ribbon and pattern in the upper button-hole of the 
left lapel of the coat. 

The Treasurer shall procure and issue the rosettes to 
members. 

The following being a fac-simile of the same, which shall 
not exceed fifteen millimeters in diameter: 




Bp*JUtn0 of ti)e 3lotoa £>ocietp* 



ARTICLE I. 

mame of Society. 
This Society shall be known by the name, style, and title 
of "Sons of the Revolution" in the State of Iowa. 

ARTICLE II. 

admission of Members. 

Candidates shall send their written application, approved 
by two members, with documentary or other proofs of quali- 
fication for membership, to the Secretary, who shall submit 
the same to the Committee on Admissions, and upon a favor- 
able report from said Committee to the Board of Managers, 
and payment of the membership fee and dues for first year, 
said applicants shall become members of the Society. 

ARTICLE III. 

3funD0. 

The membership fee shall be five (5) dollars; the annual 
dues three (3) dollars. The payment at one time of twenty- 
five (25) dollars in addition to the membership fee shall con- 
stitute a life membership. The payment at one time of one 
hundred (100) dollars shall constitute a perpetual or endowed 
membership, and upon the death of the member so paying 
the membership shall be held by the eldest son, or such other 
descendant from the ancestor from whom he claims descent 
as he may nominate; in failure of such nomination having 
been made, the Society may decide which one of the descend- 
ants shall hold the membership; provided always, that the 
Society reserves to itself the privilege of rejecting any nomi- 
nation that may not be acceptable to it. All those holding 



i6 

life or endowed memberships shall be exempt from the pay- 
ment of annual dues. 

ARTICLE IV. 

permanent JFuno. 
All life and endowed membership fees, as well as dona- 
tions which shall hereafter be paid the Society, shall remain 
forever to the use of the Society, of which the interest only 
shall be used. 

ARTICLE V. 

Annual .Meeting. 

The annual meeting of the Society shall be held on the 
nineteenth day of April, at which time a general election of 
officers by ballot shall take place, except when such date 
shall fall on Sunday, in which event the meeting shall be held 
on the following day. In such election a majority of the 
ballots given for any officer shall constitute a choice; but if, 
on the first ballot, no person shall receive such majority, then 
a further balloting shall take place, in which a plurality of 
votes given for any officer shall determine the choice. Spe- 
cial meetings shall be held by direction of the Board of 
Managers, or upon the written request of three members of 
the Society. 

ARTICLE VI. 
Qt&ccve. 

The officers of the Society shall be a President, a Vice- 
President, a Secretary, a Treasurer, a Registrar, a Historian, 
a Chaplain, and a Board of Managers, namely: the above 
named officers, ex officio, and five others. 

ARTICLE VII. 
Quotum. 

At all meetings of the Society seven members shall con- 
stitute a quorum for the transaction of business. 



17 



ARTICLE VIII. 

president. 
The President, or in his absence the Vice-President, or in 
the absence of both a chairman pro tempore, shall preside at 
all meetings of the Society, and shall have a casting vote. 
He shall preserve order, and shall decide all questions of 
order, subject to an appeal to the Society. The President 
shall be, ex officio, a member of all committees. 

ARTICLE IX. 

Secretary. 
The Secretary shall conduct the general correspondence 
of the Society. He shall notify all members of their election 
and of such other matters as may be directed by the Society. 
He shall have charge of the seal, certificate of incorporation, 
By-Laws, and records of the Society. He, together with the 
presiding officer, shall certify all acts of the Society. He 
shall, under direction of the President or Vice-President, give 
due notice of the time and place of all meetings of the Soci- 
ety, and attend the same. He shall keep fair and accurate 
records of all the proceedings and orders of the Society; and 
shall give notice to the several officers of all votes, orders, 
resolves, and proceedings of the Society affecting them or 
pertaining to their respective duties. He shall have charge 
of all printing and publications directed by the Society or by 
the Board of Managers. He shall be Secretary of the Board 
of Managers, and shall keep the record of their meetings in 
the regular minute-book of the Society. 

ARTICLE X. 

{Treasurer. 
The Treasurer shall collect and keep the funds and securi- 
ties of the Society; and so often as those sums shall amount 
to one hundred (ioo) dollars they shall be deposited in some 
bank in the City of Davenport to the credit of "The Iowa 



i8 



Society Sons of the Revolution," and shall be drawn thence 
on the check of the Treasurer for the purposes of the Society- 
only. Out of these funds he shall pay such sums as may be 
ordered by the Society, or by the Board of Managers. He 
shall keep a true account of his receipts and payments, and 
at each annual meeting render the same to the Society, when 
a committee shall be appointed to audit his accounts. He 
shall give such security as shall be required by the Board of 
Managers. He shall issue certificates of membership to per- 
sons entitled thereto. He shall upon receipt of twelve (12) 
dollars for the insignia, and twenty-five (25) cents for the 
button, procure the same for members, and furnish to the 
Secretary a list of insignia numbers. 

ARTICLE XL 
Gbaplatn. 

The Chaplain shall perform such duties as ordinarily apper- 
tain to such office. 

ARTICLE XII. 

"Registrar. 

The Registrar shall keep a roll of members, and in his 
hands shall be lodged all the proofs of membership qualifica- 
tion, and reference books and documents belonging to the 
Society; and he, under the direction of the Board of Mana- 
gers, shall make copies of such similar documents as the own- 
ers thereof may not be willing to leave permanently in the 
keeping of the Society. He shall furnish the Secretary with 
a membership list and descent, also a list of ancestry for pub- 
lication in the register of the Society. 

ARTICLE XIII. 
Historian. 

The Historian shall keep all historical records of the So- 
ciety, and prepare for the records a brief biographical sketch 



19 



of deceased members, and a historical sketch of any Society- 
entertainment and other proceedings outside of regular busi- 
ness. 

ARTICLE XIV. 

JSoaro of d&anagers. 

The Board of Managers shall consist of twelve, namely: 
the President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Regis- 
trar, Historian, and Chaplain, ex officio, and five other mem- 
bers; at least five members of the entire Board shall be resi- 
dents of the City of Davenport, Iowa, and all of whom shall 
be elected at the annual meeting. They shall elect their own 
chairman. In case of a vacancy in any of these offices, the 
Board may fill the same until the next election. They shall 
judge of the qualifications of the candidates for admission to 
the Society, and, upon the recommendation of the Committee 
on Admissions, shall have power to elect the same to mem- 
bership. They shall, through the Secretary, call special meet- 
ings at any time, upon the written request of three members 
of the Society, and at such other times as they see fit. They 
shall recommend plans for promoting the objects of the So- 
ciety, shall digest and prepare business, and shall authorize 
the disbursement and expenditure of unappropriated money 
in the treasury for the payment of the current expenses of 
the Society. They shall generally superintend the interests 
of the Society, and execute all such duties as may be com- 
mitted to them by the Society. At each annual meeting of 
the Society they shall make a general report. At all meet- 
ings of the Board of Managers four members shall constitute 
a quorum for the transaction of business. 

ARTICLE XV. 

Committee on Remissions. 
The chairman of the Board of Managers shall appoint an- 
nually three members thereof as a Committee on Admissions, 
whose duty it shall be to pass upon the qualifications of 



20 



applicants for admission to the Society, and report to the 
Board of Managers. 

ARTICLE XVI. 
Order of JBustness. 

i. Meeting called to order by presiding officer. 

2. Prayer by Chaplain, and reading of the preamble to the 

Constitution. 

3. Reading minutes of previous meetings not previously 

acted upon. 

4. Election of officers, and Managers when necessary. 

5. Report of Board of Managers. 

6. Reports of officers. 

7. Reports of committees. 

8. Unfinished business. 

9. New business. 

10. Closing prayer by the Chaplain. 

ARTICLE XVII. 

Xetter Fallot. 

The Board of Managers may call for a letter ballot of all 
the members of the Society whenever they deem it advisable 
to vote upon any question which may be submitted to the 
members other than the election of officers, and in such case 
the votes of members so received by letter shall have the 
same force and effect as if such members were personally 
present and voting at a meeting of the Society. 

ARTICLE XVIII. 
Bmenoments. 

No alteration of the By-Laws of the Society shall be made 
unless such alteration shall have been proposed at a previous 
meeting and shall be adopted by a majority of the members 
present at any meeting of the Society, five days' notice there- 
of having been given to each member. 



fl9ember0t)tp &oll. 



No. of 
Insignia. 



Elected. 

1894. Allen, George Washington, 

Great-grandson of Captain John Allen, Captain in 
Colonel John Waldron's Regiment, Brigadier-Gen- 
eral Sullivan's Brigade, New Hampshire Militia, 
1776. 

1894. Bacon, George, 

Great-grandson of Private Richard Bacon, Connecticut 
State Troops, 1776, 1 777, 1781. Taken prisoner in 
1777 ; afterwards rejoined his regiment. 

1890. Ballord, Esek Steere, 8 3S 

Great-grandson of Private Zaccheus Ballord (i73 I_ 
1800), in Captain Jeremiah Kingsley's Company, 
Colonel Jonathan Holman's Regiment from Provi- 
dence, Rhode Island ; afterward thirty-seven months 
in Captain Moore's Company, Colonel Shepherd's 
Regiment, 4th Massachusetts Continental Foot, at 
the surrender of Cornwallis. 

1892. Ballord, John Gilman, 

Great -great -grandson of Private Zaccheus Ballord 
(1 731-1800), in Captain Jeremiah Kingsley's Com- 
pany, Colonel Jonathan Holman's Regiment from 
Providence, Rhode Island; afterward thirty-seven 
months in Captain Moore's Company, Colonel Shep- 
herd's Regiment, 4th Massachusetts Continental 
Foot, at the surrender of Cornwallis. 

1892. Barhydt, Theodore Wells, 

Great-grandson of Private Jerome Barhydt, New York 
Line. 



22 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1890 Barker, Oscar Augustus, 

Son of Colonel Samuel Augustus Barker, Colonel of 
1st Connecticut Regiment in Wade's Brigade, and 
detached as Aide-de-Camp to Major-General Mar- 
quis De La Fayette. 

1890. Brady, William Perry, 1706 

Great-grandson of Captain John Brady, 12th Pennsyl- 
vania Rifles, Continental Army, 1776, Colonel Will- 
iam Cook commanding. 

Also, grandson of John Brady, Jr., unenlisted, who, at 
the age of fifteen, fought by the side of his father 
in the battle of Brandywine, at which both fell 
wounded. 

1890. Bready, John Ely, M.D., 

Great-grandson of Private John Ely, Colonel Parson's 
6th Connecticut Rifles. 

Also, great-grandson of Captain Ezra Lee, in action at 
the battles of Monmouth, Trenton, and Brandy- 
wine. 

1894. Bingham, William Putnam, 

Great-great-grandson of Brigadier-General Rufus Put- 
nam, Massachusetts Continental Line, 1 775-1 783. 

1895. Bryant, Seth Pratt, 

Grandson of Private Seth Pratt, of Colonel Bailey's 
2d Massachusetts Regiment. He enlisted at the^age 
of seventeen and served during the war. 

1893* Buford, Clarke Howe, (Died July 29, 1893.) 

Great-grandson of Captain Edward Howe; served in 
Harry Lee's Light Horse until the close of the war. 

Also, great - great - grandson of Surgeon John Julian, 
Continental Line from Virginia, 1 776-1 783. 



23 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1890. Butts, James Edward Perry, 

Great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Abel Perry, Conti- 
nental Line, Massachusetts 32nd Regiment, Conti- 
nental Foot. 

1893. Cadle, Henry, 1272 

Great-grandson of Private Daniel Lamprey, Captain 
Henry Elkins' Company, Colonel Enoch Poor's 
Regiment New Hampshire Foot, 1775; in siege of 
Boston. 

Also, great-grandson of Private Ezra Johnson, Colonel 
Nathan Baldwin's Regiment New Hampshire troops, 
1776; in battle at White Plains, New York. 

1 89 1. Cook, Ira, 

Grandson of Captain Ebenezer Cook, Corporal in 
Captain Thomas Williams' Company, Colonel Pe- 
terson's Regiment Massachusetts Minute Men, 1775 ; 
Lieutenant in Captain Ezra Whittelsey's Company, 
3d Regiment Berkshire County Militia. 

1892. Corbyn, Reverend Joseph Ingoldsby, 

Grandson of Private William Corbyn, Connecticut 
Militia. 

1894. Curtis, Honorable George Martin, 

Great-grandson of Corporal Jabez Cheesebrough, in 
Captain Squire Hill's Company, Colonel Samuel 
McLellan's Regiment Connecticut troops, 1778- 
1779. 

1894. Curtis, Charles Franklin, 

Great-grandson of Corporal Jabez Cheesebrough, in 
Captain Squire Hill's Company, Colonel Samuel 
McLellan's Regiment Connecticut troops, 1778- 
1779. 



24 

No. of 
Elected, Insignia. 

1892. De Armond, James Madison, 1500 

Grandson of Private Michael De Armond, Company 
B, 5th Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers; in battle 
of Long Island. 

1893. Deming, Judson Keith, 1275 

Great-grandson of Captain David Judson, Continental 
Army. Second Lieutenant, 1777; First Lieutenant, 
1778; Captain, 1781. Served throughout the War 
of the Revolution. 

1894. Dougherty, James Gordon, 

Great-grandson of Private Joshua Knapp, 4th West- 
chester County Regiment New York State troops, 
1779. 

1894. Dougherty, John Bell, 

Great-grandson of Private Joshua Knapp, 4th West- 
chester County Regiment New York State troops, 
1779. 

1892. Dyke, Eugene Beauharnais, 

Great-grandson of Private Samuel Dyke, Jr., in Cap- 
tain John Bart's Company, at Rutland, Vermont, 
1779, and in Captain Benjamin Cox's Company of 
Rangers, Major Eben Allen's Department; also, in 
Captain Peter Page's Company, Lieutenant Eben 
Walbndge's Regiment, 1781. 

Also, great-grandson of Private Stephen Luddington, 
Captain Brinckerhoff 's Company, Colonel Brincker- 
hoff 's 2d Regiment New York Line. 

1894. Eastman, Lauren Chase, 1590 

Great-grandson of Private Consider Chase, 6th Regi- 
ment Connecticut troops, 1775. 



25 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1894. Gardiner, Silas Wright, 

Great-grandson of Private Cornelius Genseng, Morris 
County (New Jersey) Militia, during the War of the 
Revolution. 

1894. Gilchrist, James Grant, 

Great-great-grandson of Payne Kenyon, Connecticut 
Line. 

1894. Grant, Charles Schaeffer, 

Great-great-grandson of Harmanus Schuyler, Assistant 
Deputy Commissary General, Northern Department. 

1890.* Grant, Honorable James, (Died March 14, 1891.) 

Grandson of Private Matthew Carey Whitaker, in 
General Nathaniel Green's army; wounded at the 
battle of Guilford Court House, North Carolina. 

1 89 1. Griswold, Hurlbut Edward, 

Great-grandson of Sergeant Hopestill Welch, Captain 
Lacey's Company, Colonel Swift's Regiment Con- 
necticut Line, 17 76-1 781; also in marine service 
on board galley "Washington." 

Also, great-grandson of Major Giles Pettibone, Con- 
necticut Militia, 1777, present at surrender of Bur- 
goyne. 

1894. Ham, Charles Markle, 

Great-great-grandson of Private Samuel Ham, New 
Hampshire Volunteers, Canadian Expedition, 1776; 
and Light Horse Volunteers, Rhode Island Cam- 
paign, 1778. 

1894. Ham, Clifford Dudley, 

Great-great-grandson of Private Samuel Ham, New 
Hampshire Volunteers, Canadian Expedition, 1776; 
and Light Horse Volunteers, Rhode Island Cam- 
paign, 1778. 



26 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1890. Hammatt, Edward Seymour, 627 

Great-great-great-grandson of Roger Sherman (1721- 
1793), Member of Continental Congress from Con- 
necticut, Signer of the Declaration of Independence, 
Connecticut. 

Also, great-grandson of First Lieutenant Edward Rum- 
ney (1 745-1808), in Captain William Popkin's Com- 
pany, Colonel Richard Gridley's Regiment, Massa- 
chusetts Continental Line, 1775. 

Also, great-great-grandson of Oliver Phelps (1750- 
1809), Deputy Commissary (1 776-1 777) on the 
Staff of General H. Champion, Commissary Gen- 
eral of the Continental Army. 

Also, great-grandson of John Culver, Private in Sussex 
County (New Jersey) Militia during the War of the 
Revolution. 

1894. Hayward, Eugene Beauharnais, 

Great-grandson of Private Ephraim Hayward, Morris 
County (New Jersey) Militia and New Jersey Con- 
tinental Line. 

1890. Hazen, Edward Hamlin, M. D., 

Grandson of Private Benjamin Hazen, Colonel War- 
ner's Regiment, in action at the battle of Benning- 
ton, Vermont. 

1893. Heustis, James Walters, M. D., 1502 

Great-grandson of Private Noah Herod, Captain Jona- 
than Sibley's Company, Colonel Luke Drury's Reg- 
iment Massachusetts Levies, 1781. 

1893. Hills, Henry Hervey, 1654 

Great-grandson of Sergeant Henry Franklin, Massa- 
chusetts Militia, from Amherst, Hampshire County. 
In Lieutenant Noah Dickinson's Company, Lexing- 
ton Alarm, April 19, 1775; in Lieutenant Noah 



27 

No. of 
Insignia. 

Dickinson's Company, Colonel Elisha Porter's Regi- 
ment, New Providence Alarm, August 1 8, 1777; in 
Captain Reuben Dickinson's Company, Colonel Eli- 
sha Porter's Regiment, Stillwater Alarm, September 
27, 1777- 

1 89 1. Hoyt, Archdeacon Samuel Roosevelt Johnson, D.D., n 73 

Great-grandson of John Hoyt, Jr., Prize Master (under 
commission of Congress) of Stamford, Connecticut; 
Committee of Safety, Stamford, Connecticut, 1775; 
Legislative Assembly, 1777; Private in Captain Ly- 
man's Company, Connecticut Militia, in command 
of General Wooster. 

Also, Great-grandson of Private William Yarrington, 
Captain Moulton's Company, Connecticut Line, 
General Waterbury's Brigade, 1781; Coast Defense 
from Horseneck to New Haven, and under General 
Heath in Westchester Line. 

Also, great-great-grandson of Private Ebenezer Hait, 
Captain Fuller's Company, 13th Regiment Connect- 
icut Militia and 8th Regiment Connecticut Line, 
and Captain Lockwood's Company, Coast Guard, 
1781. 

Also, great-grandson of Captain Robert Carr; Private 
in 4th Connecticut Line, 1781, and Captain in 24th 
Connecticut Militia, Westmoreland ; also under Gen- 
eral Heath in Westchester Line. 

1 89 1. Hoyt, Charles Lockwood, 

Great-grandson of John Hoyt, Jr., Prize Master (under 
commission of Congress) of Stamford, Connecticut ; 
Committee of Safety, Stamford, Connecticut, 17755 
Legislative Assembly, 1777 ; Private in Captain Ly- 
man's Company, Connecticut Militia, in command 
of General Wooster. 
Also, grandson of Private Ebenezer Lockwood, in 
Captain Gregory's Company, New York Militia, 



28 

No. of 
Elected, Insignia. 

1776, and Private in Captain Isaac Lockwood's 
Company, Seacoast Guard, stationed at Stamford, 
Connecticut, 1 781-1782. 

1894. Lamb, La Fayette, 1615 

Grandson of Adjutant David Bevier, 3d Ulster County- 
Regiment New York Militia, 1778. 

1894. Lamb, Artemus, 161 9 

Grandson of Adjutant David Bevier, 3d Ulster County 
Regiment New York Militia, 1778. 

1894. Lamb, Garrett Eugene, 161 8 

Great-grandson of Adjutant David Bevier, 3d Ulster 
County Regiment New York Militia, 1778. 

1894. Lamb, Chancy Robert, 161 7 

Great-grandson of Adjutant David Bevier, 3d Ulster 
County Regiment New York Militia, 1778. 

1894. Lamb, James Dwight, 161 6 

Great-grandson of Adjutant David Bevier, 3d Ulster 
County Regiment New York Militia, 1778. 

1894. Little, Frederick Henry, 

Great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Samuel Reed, nth 
Pennsylvania, 1 779-1 780; 3d Pennsylvania, 1781; 
1st Pennsylvania, 1783. 

1894. Mason, James Blaine, 

Great-grandson of Lieutenant-Colonel Ephraim Blaine, 
member of the Committee of Observation for Cum- 
berland County, Pennsylvania, chosen July 12, 1774; 
Lieutenant-Colonel 1st Battalion Cumberland Coun- 
ty Associators, 1777; also one of the Commissaries 
of Purchases for Pennsylvania, 1778. 



29 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1894. Mason, Hugh Sample, 

Great-great-grandson of Lieutenant-Colonel Ephraim 
Blaine, member of the Committee of Observation 
for Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, chosen July 
12, 1774; Lieutenant- Colonel 1st Battalion Cum- 
berland County Associators, 1777; also one of the 
Commissioners of Purchases for Pennsylvania, com- 
missioned February 19, 1778. 

1894. May, Calvin Dexter, 1630 

Great-grandson of Colonel Ezra May of Massachu- 
setts; Delegate to 2d Provincial Congress, 1774; 
Major in Colonel Seth Pomeroy's 2d Hampshire 
County Regiment Massachusetts Militia, 1776; Col- 
onel of above Regiment, 1777. Served at White 
Plains, Stillwater, and Saratoga. 

1892 McElroy, Reverend Irving, 

Great-grandson of Private James Knapp (176 2-1 8 12), 
enlisted at Stony Point in Connecticut Line. 

1890.* Mead, Enoch, (Died December 6, 1892.) 

Grandson of Private Ebenezer Mead, Connecticut Con- 
tinental Line, 1774; also in 8th Company, 7th Reg- 
iment, Colonel Charles Webb, 1775, at siege of Bos- 
ton, adopted as Continentals; also in Captain Hob- 
by's Company, Greenwich, Connecticut, under Gen- 
eral Wooster, 1 776-1 777. 

1892. Mee, Reverend Charles Brassington, 

Great-grandson of Private Aaron Putnam, 4th Con- 
necticut Regiment, 1 780-1 783. 

1894.* Merchant, Lorenzo Stoddard, (Died Oct. 18, 1894.) 1585 
Great-grandson of Private Obadiah Dunham, Captain 
Thomas Sawyer's Company Vermont Militia, 1779; 
also Captain Eli Noble's Company, Major Ebenezer 
Allen's Detachment, Vermont. 



30 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1894. Parker, Thomas William, 1670 

Great-grandson of Captain Nicholas N. Anthony, 3d 
Regiment New York City Militia, Colonel Abraham 
P. Lott, 1775. 

1895. Parker, Alonzo Jeffrey, 1762 

Great-great-grandson of Captain Nicholas N. Anthony, 
3d Regiment New York City Militia, Colonel Abra- 
ham P. Lott, 1775. 

1890. Perry, Right Reverend William Stevens, D.D. (Oxcrn.), 

LL.D., D.C.L., Bishop of Iowa, 314 

Grandson of Lieutenant Abel Perry, Continental Line, 
Massachusetts, 3 2d Regiment Continental Foot. 

Also, great-grandson of William Stevens, seaman on 
Continental Frigate "Boston." 

1894. Peterson, Charles Joseph, 

Great-grandson of Private Jabez Rockwell, Connecti- 
cut troops, 1777. 

1892. Putnam, William Clement, 1505 

Great-great-grandson of Private Stephen Putnam, Eli- 
sha Whitcomb's Company, Colonel Timothy Bedel's 
Regiment New Hampshire Volunteers, 1 777-1 778. 
Also, great-great-grandson of Reverend James Cald- 
well, Chaplain in Colonel Dayton's New Jersey Reg- 
iment, also for a time Assistant Commissary; killed 
at the battle of Elizabethtown, New Jersey, on No- 
vember 14th, 1 781. 

1892. Richardson, Stevens Perry, 

Great-grandson of Reverend Joseph Wheeler (1735— 
1783), Private in Captain Samuel Stone's Company, 
Colonel William Prescott's Regiment Massachusetts 
Militia, Lexington Alarm, April 19th, 1775; mem- 
ber of Massachusetts Provincial Congress. 

Also, great-grandson of Reverend Cotton Mather Smith, 
Chaplain of Connecticut Regiment at Ticonderoga. 



31 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1895. Robison, Charles Seymour, 

Great-grandson of Captain John Marshall, Ensign Sec- 
ond Battalion of Miles' Pennsylvania Rifle Regi- 
ment, 1776; Second Lieutenant 3d Pennsylvania, 
1776; First Lieutenant, 1777; Captain-Lieutenant, 
1779; Captain, 1 779-1 783. 

1895. Rogers, Wallace Brown, 

Great-great-grandson of Private Matthew Brown, in 
Captain James McClure's Company, Colonel Will- 
iam Montgomery's Regiment New Jersey troops, 
1776; also member Northumberland County Com- 
mittee of Safety, 1776; also member Provincial Con- 
ference, Philadelphia, 1776. 

1890. Ross, Huitt, 

Great-grandson of George Ross, Signer of the Declara- 
tion of Independence, Delaware. 
Also, great-grandson of Stephen Hopkins, Signer of the 
Declaration of Independence, Rhode Island. 

1890. Salter, Reverend William, D.D., 

Great-grandson of Captain Mark Fernald (1 725-1 779), 
in the Privateer Service out of Portsmouth, New 
Hampshire. Died of wounds in Boston, May 14th, 
1779. 

1892. Salter, Richard Henry, Jr., 

Great-grandson of Ezekiel Williams, Commissary of 
Prisoners for Connecticut, 1777. 

Also, great-grandson of Reverend Joseph Wheeler 
(1 735-1 783), Private in Captain Samuel Stone's 
Company, Colonel William Prescott's Regiment 
Massachusetts Militia, Lexington Alarm, April 19th, 
1 775 ; member of Massachusetts Provincial Congress. 

1890. Sheldon, Harvey Smith, 

Grandson of Lieutenant Daniel Sheldon, original mem- 
ber of the Society of the Cincinnati. 



32 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1895. Shoecraft, Simon, 

Grandson of Private Jacob Shoecraft, 3d Ulster County 
Regiment, Colonel Lee Pawling, New York troops. 

1893. Shoecraft, Lucius McIntosh, 

Great-grandson of Private Jacob Shoecraft, 3d Ulster 
County Regiment, Colonel Lee Pawling, New York 
troops. 

1890. Smith, Samuel Francis, 1450 

Great-grandson of Reverend Hezekiah Smith, D.D. 
(1 737-1805), Chaplain, Massachusetts Line. 

1890. Sturgis, John Hubbard, 

Great-grandson of Private John Codman, Independent 
Company of Boston Cadets, in service in Rhode 
Island. 

1895. Swan, Fitch Williams, 

Great-grandson of Private Perregreen Buck, Captain 
John Thompson's Company, Lieutenant - Colonel 
Cornelius Van Veghten's 13th Albany County Regi- 
ment New York Levies, 1778. 

1895. Torbert, Horace Gates, 

Great-great-great-grandson of Captain Adam Martin, 
Colonel Bigelow's Regiment, Massachusetts troops, 
1775; Rhode Island in 1 779-1 780, on the Coast 
Defense. 

1895. Tredway, Alfred Worthington, 

Great-great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Elijah Worth- 
ington, in Captain Amos Jones' Company Connect- 
icut State troops, Lexington Alarm, 1775. 

Also, great-grandson of Private Elijah Tredway, in 
Captain Amos Jones' Company Connecticut State 
troops, Lexington Alarm, 1775. 



33 

No. of 
Elected. Insienia " 

1894. Wadleigh, Le Roi Bradley, 

Great-grandson of Private John Wadleigh, Captain 
Daniel Moore's Company, Colonel John Stark's 
Regiment New Hampshire Militia, 1775. 

1894. Wadleigh, Le Roi Pollock, 

Great-great-grandson of Private John Wadleigh, Cap- 
tain Daniel Moore's Company, Colonel John Stark's 
Regiment New Hampshire Militia, 1775. 

1895. Wadsworth, William Cooke, 

Great-grandson of Colonel Joseph Piatt Cooke, 16th 
Regiment Connecticut Militia, 1776, Brigadier Gen- 
eral Wolcott commanding ; also Colonel in Danbury 
Alarm, 1777. 

1 89 1. Walton, Josiah Proctor, 

Grandson of Private Josiah Proctor Walton (1734- 
1826), wounded at the battle of Bunker Hill. 

1894. Ware, Frederick Eugene, 

Great-grandson of Adjutant David Bevier, Adjutant 3d 
Ulster County Regiment New York Militia, 1778. 

1894. Ware, Edwin Morgan, 

Great-grandson of Adjutant David Bevier, Adjutant 3d 
Ulster County Regiment New York Militia, 1778. 

1895. Waters, Reverend Nacy McGee, 

Great-great-grandson of Private Thomas McGee (1776), 
New Jersey troops ; engaged in battles of Monmouth 
and Princeton. 

1890. Watkins, Charles S., 

Grandson of Sergeant Theodore Bellows, Captain P. 
Page's Company, Colonel Nichols' Regiment New 
Hampshire State Militia; served at the defense of 
West Point, 1780. 



34 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1 89 1. Watson, Reverend Samuel Newell, D.D., 

Great-great-grandson of Surgeon James Newell, M.D., 
2d Regiment New Jersey Militia; in action at battle 
of Monmouth. 

1894. Weaver, Reverend Clinton Hosmer, 

Great-grandson of Private Francis Wall, Massachusetts, 
1 776-1 783; engaged in battles of Trenton, Prince- 
ton, Burgoyne's surrender, and German Flats. 

1894. Webster, Parker Stewart, 

Great-grandson of Captain Daniel Stewart, 2d Regi- 
ment Connecticut Line, 1779; engaged in Tyron's 
Invasion of Connecticut, July, 1779. 

1890. Whitaker, Charles, 

Great-grandson of Private Matthew Carey Whitaker, 
in General Nathaniel Green's Army, wounded at 
battle of Guilford Court House, North Carolina. 

1894. Whitcomb, Edgar Hiram, 

Great-grandson of Captain Jonathan Whitcomb, 3d 
Regiment New Hampshire State Militia; engaged 
in the battle of Bunker Hill with his Company, and 
commended for his "resolution." 

1894. Wilcox, Frederick Plumb, 

Grandson of Private Reuben Wilcox, Lieutenant-Col- 
onel Meade's 9th Regiment Connecticut Militia; also 
served under Captain Keeler at the battle of Mor- 
risiania. 

1 89 1. Wolcott, Reverend Peter Clark, 

Great-great-grandson of Joseph Wolcott, Lexington 
Alarm; afterward Private in 6th Company, General 
Wooster's 1st Connecticut Regiment; reenlisted in 
April, 1777, as a fifer in Colonel Livingston's Regi- 
ment and 1st and 3d Connecticut Line; honorably 
discharged December 31st, 1781. 



3Jn flpemortam< 



A P a ^ e ? f Name. Died. 

Admission. '" mc ' 

1890. JAMES GRANT Mar. 14, 1891. 

1890. ENOCH MEAD, Dec. 6, 1892. 

1892. CLARKE HOWE BUFORD, .... July 29, 1893. 

1894. LORENZO STODDARD MERCHANT, Oct. 18, 1894. 



Ancestors ant* ^Descendants 



1775-1783- 



Allen, John. 

Allen, George Washington. 

Anthony, Nicholas. 

Parker, Thomas William. 
Parker, Alonzo Jeffrey. 

Armstrong, Jeremiah. 

Armstrong, Charles Emerson. 

Atherton, Oliver. 

Deming, Judson Keith. 

Bacon, Richard. 
Bacon, George. 

Ballord, Zaccheus. 
Ballord, Esek Steere. 
Ballord, John Gilman. 

Barhydt, Jerome. 

Barhydt, Theodore Wells. 

Barker, Samuel Augustus. 
Barker, Oscar Augustus. 

Bellows, Thoedore. 
Watkins, Charles S. 

Bennett, Moses. 

Doe, Alonzo Plummer. 

Bevier, David. 
Lamb, Lafayette. 
Lamb, Artemus. 
Lamb, Garrett Eugene. 
Lamb, Chancy Robert. 
Lamb, James Dwight. 
Ware, Frederick Eugene. 
Ware, Edward Morgan. 



Blaine, Ephraim. 

Mason, James Blaine. 
Mason, Hugh Sample. 
Mason, John Burrows. 

Brady, John. 

Brady, William Perry. 

Brady, John, Jr. 

Brady, William Perry. 

Brown, Matthew. 

Rogers, Wallace Brown., 

Buck, Perregreen. 

Swan, Fitch Williams. 

Caldwell, James. 

Putnam, William Clement. 

Carr, Robert. 

Hoyt, Saml.Roosevelt Johnson. 

Chase, Consider. 

Eastman, Lauren Chase. 

Cheesebrough, Jabez. 
Curtis, George Martin. 
Curtis, Charles Franklin. 

Codman, John. 

Sturgis, John Hubbard. 

Cooke, Joseph Platt. 

Wadsworth, William Cooke. 

Cook, Ebenezer. 
Cook, Ira. 



38 



Corbyn, William. 

Corbyn, Joseph Ingoldsby. 

Culver, John. 

Hammatt, Edward Seymour. 

De Armond, Michael. 

De Armond, James Madison. 

Drury, Ebenezer. 

Deming, Judson Keith. 

Dunham, Obadiah. 

*Merchant, Lorenzo Stoddard. 

Dyke, Samuel, Jr. 

Dyke, Eugene Beauharnais. 

Eaton, Uriah. 

Walton, Josiah Proctor. 

Ely, John. 

Bready, John Ely. 

Fernald, Mark. 
Salter, William. 

Franklin, Henry. 

Hills, Henry Hervey. 

Genung, Cornelius. 

Gardiner, Silas Wright. 
Gardiner, George Schuyler. 
Gardiner, Philip Stimson. 

Hait, Ebenezer. 

Hoy t, Saml. Roosevelt Johnson. 

Ham, Samuel. 

Ham, Charles Markel. 
Ham, Clifford Dudley. 

Hayward, Ephraim. 

Hayward, Eugene Beauharnais. 

Hazen, Benjamin. 

Hazen, Edward Hamlin. 

Herod, Noah. 

Heustis, James Walter. 



Hopkins, Stephen. 
Ross, Huitt. 

Howe, Edward. 

*Buford, Clarke Howe. 

Hoyt, John, Jr. 

Hoyt, Saml. Roosevelt Johnson. 
Hoyt, Charles Lockwood. 

Johnson, Ezra. 
Cadle, Henry. 

Judson, David. 

Deming, Judson Keith. 

Julian, John. 

*Buford, Clarke Howe. 

Kenyon, Payne. 

Gilchrist, James Grant. 

Knapp, Joshua. 

Dougherty, James Gordon. 
Dougherty, John Bell. 

Knapp, James. 

McElroy, Irving. 

Lamprey, Daniel. 
Cadle, Henry. 

Lee, Ezra. 

Bready, John Ely. 

Lockwood, Ebenezer. 

Hoyt, Charles Lockwood. 

Luddington, Stephen. 

Dyke, Eugene Beauharnais. 

Marshall, John. 

Robison, Charles Sevmour. 

Martin, Adam. 

Torbert, Horace Gates. 

May, Ezra. 

May, Calvin Dexter. 



39 



McConnell, John. 

Robison, Charles Seymour. 

McGee, Thomas. 

Waters, Nacy McGee. 

Mead, Ebenezer. 
*Mead, Enoch. 

Newell, James. 

Watson, Samuel Newell. 

Perry, Abel. 

Perry, William Stevens. 
Butts, James Edward Perry. 

Pettibone, Giles. 

Griswold, Hurlbut Edward. 

Phelps, Abel. 

Phelps, George Benajah. 

Phelps, Oliver. 

Hammatt, Edward Seymour. 

Phillips, Ichabod. 

Staples, George Allen. 

Pratt, Seth. 

Bryant, Seth Pratt. 

Putnam, Aaron. 

Mee, Charles Brassington. 

Putnam, Rufus. 

Bingham, William Putnam, 

Putnam, Stephen. 

Putnam, William Clement. 

Reid, Samuel. 

Little, Frederick Henry. 

Rockwell, Jabez. 

Peterson, Charles Joseph. 

Ross, George. 
Ross, Huitt. 



Rumnev, Edward 

Hammatt, Edward^Seymour. 

Schuyler, Harmanus. 
Grant, Charles Schaffer. 

Sheldon, Daniel. 

Sheldon, Harvey Smith. 

Sherman, Roger. 

Hammatt, Edward Seymour. 

Sherman, William. 

Hammatt, Edward Seymour. 

Shoecraft, Jacob. 
Shoecraft, Simon. 
Shoecraft, Lucius. 

Smith, Cotton Mather. 
Richardson, Stevens Perry. 

Smith, Hezekiah. 

Smith, Samuel Francis. 

Smith, Isaac. 

Smith, Frank Welch. 

Starr, Thomas. 

Goodell, George Arthur. 

Stevens, William. 

Perry, William Stevens. 

Stewart, Daniel. 

Webster, Parker Stewart. 

Stark, John. 

Phelps, George Benajah. 

Tredway, Elijah. 

Tredway, Alfred Worthington. 

Wadleigh, John. 

Wadleigh, Le Roi Bradley. 
Wadleigh, Le Roi Pollock. 

Wall, Francis. 

Weaver, Clinton Hosmer. 



40 



Walton, Josiah. 

Walton, Josiah Proctor. 

Welch, Hopestill. 

Griswold, Hurlbut Edward. 

Wheeler, Joseph. 

Richardson, Stevens Perry. 
Salter, Richard Henry, Jr. 

Whitaker, Matthew Carey. 
Grant, James. 
Whitaker, Charles. 

Whitcomb, Jonathan. 

Whitcomb, Edgar Hiram. 



Wilcox, Reuben. 

Wilcox, Frederick Plumb. 

Williams, Ezekiel. 

Salter, Richard Henry, Jr. 

Wolcott, Joseph. 

Wolcott, Peter Clark. 

Worthington, Elijah. 

Tredway, Alfred Worthington. 

Yarrington, William. 

Hoyt, Saml. Roosevelt Johnson. 



Life member. 



Elected. 

1893. Cadle, Henry, 

Of the Missouri Society. 



No. of 
Insignia. 

1272 



CransfecretJ ^embers. 



1 89 1. Cooke, Reverend Eleutherous Jay, 
To the Ohio Society. 

1 89 1. Hale, Right Reverend Charles Reuben, Bishop of 

Cairo, 774 

To the Illinois Society. 

1892. Mac Kinlay, William Egbert Wheeler, 

To the Illinois Society. 

1 89 1. Spalding, Right Reverend John Franklin, D.D., Bishop 
of Colorado, 
To the Colorado Society. 



anaemia. 



No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1895. Armstrong, Charles Emmerson, 

Grandson of Private Jeremiah Armstrong, in Captain 
Thomas Wheeler's Company, Colonel Chapman's 
Regiment Connecticut Militia, 1778, and in Colonel 
Canfield's Regiment Connecticut Militia, 1781. 

1893. Deming, Judson Keith, 1275 

Also, great-great-grandson of Private Asahel Jerome, 
in Captain Robert Durkee's Company, Connecticut 
troops, from Wyoming Valley, Pennsylvania ; served 
at Brandywine and Germantown ; died in the serv- 
ice, 1777. 

Also, great-great-grandson of Private John Goodsell, 
in Captain Thomas Nash's Company, 4th Regiment 
Connecticut Militia, Lieutenant- Colonel Jonathan 
Dimon commanding; at Fishkill, 1777; killed at 
Fairfield, July 7th, 1779. 

Also, great-great-grandson of Second Lieutenant Oliver 
Atherton; Sergeant Lexington Alarm; Second Ser- 
geant, May, 1775; Sergeant, October, 1775, and in 
1777 ; Second Lieutenant 10th Company 5th Hamp- 
shire County Regiment Massachusetts Militia, 1780. 

Also, great-great-grandson of Private Ebenezer Drury, 
in Captain Cushing's Company, Colonel Artemus 
Ward's Regiment, Lexington Alarm, 1775, and in 
Captain Nye's Company, Colonel Sparhawk's Regi- 
ment, 1778. 

1895. Doe, Alonzo Plummer, 

Grandson of Private Moses Bennett, in Captain Na- 
thaniel Warner's Company, Colonel Little's Regi- 
ment Massachusetts troops, 1775. 



42 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

1895. Gardiner, George Schuyler, 

Great-grandson of Private Cornelius Genung, Morris 
County (New Jersey) Militia, during the War of the 
Revolution. 

1895. Gardiner, Philip Stimson, 

Great- great-grandson of Private Cornelius Genung, 
Morris County (New Jersey) Militia, during the War 
of the Revolution. 

1895. Goodell, George Arthur, 

Great-great-grandson of Captain Thomas Starr, Con- 
necticut Militia; wounded in Danbury Raid, April 
27th, 1777. 

1890. Hammatt, Edward Seymour, 627 

Also, great-great-grandson of William Sherman (of 
Connecticut), who was the second son of Roger Sher- 
man, Signer of the Declaration of Independence; 
William Sherman appointed Paymaster of Colonel 
Seth Warner's Continental Regiment, July 6th, 1776. 
Retired January 1st, 1781. 

1895. Mason, John Burrows, 

Great-grandson of Lieutenant-Colonel Ephraim Blaine, 
Member of the Committee of Observation for Cum- 
berland County, Pennsylvania, chosen July 13th, 
1774; Lieutenant-Colonel 1st Battalion Cumberland 
County Associators, 1777; also, one of the Commis- 

• saries of Purchases for Pennsylvania, 1778. 

1895. Phelps, George Benajah, 

Great-great-grandson of Captain John Stark, in Colonel 
Ira Allen's Regiment Vermont Militia; was wounded 
at the battle of Bennington, August 16th, 1777; at 
Skeensboro and Ticonderoga in 1780; also, Cap- 
tain in Colonel Samuel Fletcher's Battalion, 1781. 






43 

No. of 
Elected. Insignia. 

Also, great-great-grandson of Private Abel Phelps, in 
Captain Thomas Bull's Company in Colonel Ira 
Allen's Regiment Vermont Militia, 1781. 

1895. Robison, Charles Seymour, 

Also, great-grandson of Captain John McConnell, 
Lieutenant 5th Battalion Cumberland County (Penn- 
sylvania) Associators, 1776; Captain 8th Company, 
6th Battalion, Cumberland County (Pennsylvania) 
Militia, 1777-78. 

1895. Smith, Frank Welch, 

Great-great-grandson of Colonel Isaac Smith of Ips- 
wich, Massachusetts; Major in Lieutenant-Colonel 
Michael Farley's 3d Essex County Regiment, Lex- 
ington Alarm, April 19th, 1775 ; Lieutenant-Colonel 
in Colonel Moses Little's 17th Regiment, commis- 
sioned June 27th, 1775; chosen by the House of 
Representatives, Colonel of Essex County Regiment, 
to serve in Boston till April 1st, 1776; appointment 
concurred in by the Council, January 23d, 1776. 

1895. Staples, George Allen, M. D., 

Great-grandson of Ichabod Phillips, Private in Captain 
John Williams' Company, Colonel Vose's Regiment 
Massachusetts troops; enlisted, 1780; served three 
years and was present at Surrender of Cornwallis. 

1 89 1. Walton, Josiah Proctor, 

Great-grandson of Private Josiah Walton, in Captain 
Ezra Towne's Company, Colonel Reed's Regiment 
New Hampshire Militia; wounded at the battle of 
Bunker Hill; was appointed, January, 1776, on the 
Committee of Correspondence, Inspection, and 
Safety. Private in Captain Stephen Parker's Com- 
pany, in Colonel Moses Nichols' Regiment, General 
Stark's Brigade New Hampshire Militia, 1777. Was 
present at battle of Bennington. 



44 



Also, great-grandson of Private Beriah Oakes. Served 
at time of Lexington Alarm to April 29th, 1775; 
also signed, at Charlestown, June 26th, 1775, for 
further service. 

Also, great-grandson of Sergeant Uriah Eaton, Massa- 
chusetts troops; was in the battles of Bunker Hill 
and Saratoga and served during the War. 



Errata. 



Page 7. For "Written by Mr. Samuel Francis Smith," read "Writ- 
ten by Rev. Samuel Francis Smith, D.D." 

Page 21. Barhydt, Theodore Wells. For "great-grandson" read 
"grandson." 

Page 23. Cadle, Henry. For "Nathan Baldwin" read " Nahum 
Baldwin." 

Page 25. Gardiner, Silas Wright. For "Cornelius Ginseng" read 
" Cornelius Genung." 

Page 32. Shoecraft, Simon. For "Colonel Lee Pawling" read 
" Colonel Levi Pawling." 

Page 32. Shoecraft, Lucius Mcintosh. For "Elected 1893" read 
"Elected 1895," and for "Colonel Lee Pawling" read "Colonel 
Levi Pawling." 

Page 33. Walton, Josiah Proctor. For "Grandson of Private Jo- 
siah Proctor Walton (1734-1826)" read "Great-grandson of 
Private Josiah Walton (1736-182 6)." 



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